Revere senior Stephanie Danesis recently made an oral commitment to continue her academic and tennis career at Miami (Ohio), choosing the RedHawks over Minnesota and Marquette.

"I visited there and I just really love the campus, the coach and the girls," said Danesis, a 5-foot-7 left-hander. "I want to major in business and they have a really good business program, and it is not as far from Akron as Minnestoa or Marquette are."

The Revere boys golf team won its third consecutive Suburban League postseason tournament to clinch the league title. Revere won a share of the league title with Green in 2006, but the Minutemen were able to win it outright this season.

Revere finished first in the team scoring with 309 points. Junior Cory Hill shot a 4-over 75 to lead the Minutemen. Junior Tom Kimberly (77), sophomore Patrick Alfieri (78) and junior Mack Kerker (79) rounded out Revere's top four.

Nick Fleming, a key member of the Tallmadge High offensive line, is out indefinitely with a knee injury. Fleming, a senior, was injured in the Blue Devils' 24-14 triumph at Green last Thursday. The 6-foot-1, 250-pound Fleming was All-Summit County by the Beacon Journal and second-team all-district in 2006 as a junior.

I have been the Beacon Journal voter to the Associated Press state prep poll for eight years. My goal is to vote for the best area teams - to give them representation -- and the best statewide teams. Here are the local schools whom I voted for today after the fourth week.If your team is not there and you think they should be, now is the time to state your case!Div I: Brunswick, Wadsworth, GlenOak and Stow (for the first time ever).II: Tallmadge, Lake and Cloverleaf.III: Walsh and NorthwestIV: St. V-M, Canton CC, CVCA, Orrville and ManchesterV: Norwayne, Waynedale and NorthwesternVI: Mogadore

St. Vincent-St. Mary broke a nine-year losing streak against archrival Archbishop Hoban with a 33-28 win Saturday night at the Rubber Bowl. First-year Irish coach Dan Boarman, a St. V-M graduate, told me earlier in the week that he was undefeated against the Knights (1-3), and that's the attitude he wanted to instill in his players. Apparently, Boarman, who coached at Copley for 17 seasons, got the message across that the past didn't matter because his players responded and maintained their perfect record of 4-0 this season.

Firestone senior Cierra Harris has made an oral commitment to attend and play basketball for the University of Dayton.

Harris, a 6-foot-1 guard/forward, will become a four-year starter when she plays this winter for the defending City Series champion Falcons. She averaged 12.5 points, 13.2 rebounds, two assists and one steal per game as a junior. She earned second-team all-district and All-City Series honors.

Working conditions are important to you on your job. So why shouldn't they be important to sports writers and radio and television comentators who cover high school football? There is no cry-baby in me here. Just a plea to have a place to work that has nothing to do with creature comforts, but with having a proper place to provide what in many ways is a service to local schools and fans. To wit, Summit County has some of the worst press boxes I have ever seen. Schools in Stark and Medina counties are far superior, top to bottom. Rick Noland, a fine reporter for the Medina Gazette, mentioned the deplorable press box at Hudson in one of his recent columns. Media everywhere has learned the hard way that some Summit County press boxes don't even have THE bare minimum to work, ie., a phone line. I have seen radio commentators have to string phone lines from the concession stands in order to call the game. Many schools understand the value of media coverage and have taken steps to upgrade their facilities. Believe it when I say that radio, television and newspaper people ignore certain stadiums and schools because it is easier to go elsewhere. Remember, every night there are many games to cover. It is also distressing because many of these substandard facilities are among the best programs in the area. I am not afraid to risk consternation by giving you my least favorite places to cover games in Summit County. Alphabetically, Archbishop Hoban Copley Cuyahoga Falls Hudson Nordonia Tallmadge

Archbishop Hoban High School announced Monday that it has hired Scott Koenig as its new head baseball coach.

Koenig, who was an assistant coach at Firestone for the past six years, will replace former Knights coach Ted Guscoff. Guscoff, who was the head baseball coach at Hoban for five seasons, guided the Knights to the district tournament four times and the regional tournament once. He resigned from Hoban in July to take the head coaching job at Massillon.

Canton McKinley High School will forfeit its 66-6 win over a Detroit high school after McKinley's coach discovered that an academically ineligible player participated in the game, school officials said.

Kara Murphy, a 2007 graduate of St. Vincent-St. Mary, was a basketball star for the Irish. Murphy, a University of Akron recruit, suffered a severe concussion in a Division II district final game against Archbishop Hoban. Murphy was hospitalized and had trouble functioning for awhile.

There are a few scores that stood out in week 2 of high school football. Here is what I noticed:

North beat Coventry 32-22. That means North is 2-0. North is undefeated after the first two weeks for the first time since 1976. The Vikings are off to this rare start with first-year head coach Ken Johnson leading the way.